Tag: Diana Pasulka

Does Roswell Debris Hold Evidence of Off-World Vehicles?

Article by Gautam Peddada                                                July 7, 2021                                                             (thepulse.one)

• On July 16, 1945, the world’s first atomic bomb was exploded at Trinity Site, 200 miles south of the Los Alamos National Laboratory where it was designed. It basically marked the ending of WWII. At this time, there were numerous claims regarding the existence of odd lights performing impossible maneuvers in the skies near Los Alamos. Several memorandums from Director of Military Applications James McCormack Jr. were obtained through FOIA requests. “The motion of the bodies (estimated at between 14 and 20 in number) appeared to be a swirling nature,” writes McCormak. “…[I]t was impossible to resolve individual shape however, the general impression was gained that bodies were white.” Thereafter at the same spot, seven UFO crashes would occur in New Mexico between 1945–1950.

• In August 1945, two boys, Jose (9) and Reme (7), were searching for a cow on a ranch west of Trinity Site in San Antonio, New Mexico when they heard a thunderous explosion. They followed the sound and spotted a 25–30 foot avocado-shaped vessel containing two living beings. The boys hid for days watching the military collect the crashed wreckage. Jose and Reme took a piece of this spaceship, which one of them still possesses today. Jacque Valle’ and Paola Harris have just co-written a new book: Trinity: The Best-Kept Secret, which recounts a 20-year effort to retrieve this artifact. It is currently being peer-reviewed in a controlled scientific study.

• Mac Brazel worked as a foreman on the Foster Ranch, a few miles from the town of Corona, New Mexico. In July 1947, Brazel discovered that his sheep would not cross the rubble to get to the water because of a significant amount of debris blocking their path. Brazel went into town and told Jesse Wade, the owner of a bar about the situation. Wade told him to report it to the Army base in Roswell. Brazel then went to the Corona Drug Store to make the call.

• The Department of Defense insisted that the Roswell event was crashed test balloon – a story that has all the hallmarks of a cover-up. Over 90 people have come forward to confirm Mac Brazel’s testimony, including Mac’s son Bill Brazel. Bill’s alien “disc pieces” collection was confiscated by the Air Force in 1949 after he “spoke too much” at a Corona, New Mexico pub the night before. When Chuck Wade, Jesse’s son, heard that the Army had taken Bill Brazel’s artifacts, he became suspicious and determined to delve more into the UFO issue.

• On July 2, 1947, a young Gerald Anderson, along with his father, brother, uncle, and cousin traveled from Albuquerque to the Plains of San Augustin when they came upon a 32-foot crashed UFO. Gerald informed Chuck Wade that there were four aliens: one alive, one injured, and two dead.

• Shortly after, word got around and people started coming out to see the crash site. An archaeologist brought five of his students. This crash site was dubbed “Barney Barnett site” after another local. These citizens were crowding around and discussing the wreck when a military staff car arrived, followed by a truckload of soldiers who promptly encircled the people. The officers told them harshly that they were not authorized to be there, and that if they told anybody what they had seen, they would be killed.

• Wade was informed by Gerald Anderson that the military had brought a flatbed truck, a crane, tanker vehicles, truckloads of supplies, and even a bulldozer. Anderson said that it looked like an invasion force. The Army’s rows of pitched tents remained for many days. Chuck Wade shared casually that they pilfered “a military canteen and an army cot from their center of operations”.

• Chuck and Nancy Wade have since visited the UFO crash site three times with an adult Gerald Anderson, digging for any artifacts that may still be out there. In the spring of 2004, Nancy and Chuck Wade along with UFO researcher Art Campbell and four other workers retrieved eight pieces of alien foil. Wade took six of the pieces to Material Physicist Steven Colbern of Neutron Star Nanotechnology in Oxnard, California. There the scientists

• The samples were photographed using a magnification microscope and examined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to determine the concentrations of the component and trace elements in each sample. They were also subjected to the field of a Neodymium-Iron-Boron (NIB) magnet. They found that the samples included very rare alloying elements not found in aluminium alloys in 1947. The coatings on the samples were especially unique – rich in silica, titania, magnesia, sulphate, phosphate, and chloride mixed with the metal. The presence of carbon nanotubes in the samples suggests that they could be “smart metal” materials. This sort of composite metal was definitely not accessible in 1947. The isotopic ratios of the sample elements were highly skewed in comparison to their terrestrial values, suggesting that the samples came from an unknown source.

• Dr. Russell Vernon Clark performed an investigation and found that the materials discovered at San Augustine and Corona (Roswell) crash sites are quite similar in composition to a different artifact retrieved from the Roswell site. “The composition of this material was found to be greater than 99% silicon,” said Dr. Clark. “Therefore it should be considered that this material is both manufactured and extraterrestrial in origin.” As a result of his participation in the Roswell artifact study, Dr. Clark found himself the target of a disinformation campaign. The University of California issued a statement that Dr. Clark was not a university employee – an outright public deception.

• Author of the book: American Cosmic, Diana Pasulka claimed in a podcast interview in 2021 that the strange materials in Chuck Wade’s possession are legitimate, and that the US government is in possession of wrecked UFO vehicles. Former Pentagon officials Christopher Mellon and Luis Elizondo have also supported this contention. Today, there appears to be legitimate scientific research on items recovered from Roswell crash sites.

• In American Cosmic, a NASA Engineer with one of the highest degrees of security clearance in the US Government claims that extraterrestrials are “gifting” humanity their technology by purposely crashing their off-world vehicles in the southeastern New Mexico area.

• It is perplexing why the mainstream media continues to overlook genuine assertions about the event. Small-town folks are allowed to convey their fantastic tales to the rest of the world, but they receive no help from the scientific community to either clarify or put a stop to the misconceptions. Is the entirety of the media suffering from cognitive dissonance? Or are we dealing with the greatest secret ever kept by a Government from it’s citizens?

 

The Los Alamos National Laboratory was founded in 1943, just a few years after

                 Mac Brazel

World War II began, with a single goal in mind: to design and produce an atomic weapon. It only took 27 months. The world’s first atomic bomb was exploded at Trinity Site, 200 miles south of Los Alamos, on July 16, 1945. This test demonstrated that the Laboratory’s scientists had effectively weaponized the atom.

During this era of nuclear development, there were numerous claims from respectable scientists and physicists regarding the existence of odd lights performing impossible maneuvers near Los Alamos. Several memorandums from Director of Military Applications James McCormack Jr. have been obtained through FOIA requests.

“The motion of the bodies (estimated at between 14 and 20 in number) appeared to be a swirling nature, not unlike a flock of towering geese or a handful of leaflets in an up-draft. Either due to distance or size, it was impossible to resolve individual shape however, the general impression was gained that bodies were white.”

Soon after the letter was written, the military would be dealing with what appears to be the greatest secret ever kept by a Government against it’s citizens. The manner the United States ruled would alter forever for reasons only known to the gatekeepers of the National Security Complex. Diana Walsh Pasulka, author of the Oxford-published book American Cosmic, refers to New Mexico as a sacred site since it is considered to be the spot where alien intelligence revealed itself to humans. In religious studies, such an occurrence is known as hierophany. A heirophany is a holy manifestation. It happens when a nonhuman intelligent being falls from the sky to the ground or otherwise manifests itself. In American Cosmic, a NASA Engineer with one of the highest degrees of security clearance in the United States Government explains that extraterrestrials are gifting humanity technology by purposefully crashing off-world vehicles. It’s tough to accept such a claim, but the procedure should begin by analyzing any

                  James McCormack Jr.

debris to establish its origin.

Seven unknown craft crashes (gifts?) would occur in New Mexico between 1945–1950. Starting in August 1945, when two boys, Jose and Reme, ages 9 and 7, were searching for a cow that was ready to deliver a calf on a ranch west of Trinity Site in San Antonio, New Mexico. They heard a thunderous explosion, identical to the one they had heard a month earlier. They followed the sound and spotted a 25–30 foot avocado-shaped vessel containing two living beings. The youngsters hid for many days, watching while the military collect the crashed wreckage. Jose and Reme extracted a piece of this spaceship, which one of them still possesses today.

This incident is documented in Scientist and US Air Force Project Blue Book Consultant Jacque Valle’s new book Trinity: The Best-Kept Secret, which was released in June and co-written with Paola Harris. Featuring an investigation that took over 20 years. The artifact, which had been retrieved and concealed all these years, is currently being peer-reviewed in a controlled scientific study.

The Famous Roswell Incident

Mac Brazel discovered a significant amount of debris on the Foster Ranch, where he worked as a foreman, in July 1947. Mr. Brazel traveled a few miles to the town of Corona and asked Jesse Wade, the owner of a bar, to close his establishment and follow him to the debris field. Jesse was informed by Mac Brazel that his sheep would not cross the rubble to get to the water. Mr. Wade turned down Mac’s request, but he did advise that Mac Brazel report the incident to the military in Roswell. Mac then went up to the Corona Drug Store and asked Geraldine Perkins, the shopkeeper, to accompany him to the ranch. He also declined, but Geraldine assisted Mr. Brazel in making a phone call to Roswell. The rest of the story is history.

Jesse Wade subsequently admitted to Chuck, his son, that he wished he had gone to the ranch with Mac Brazel. One has to wonder how history would have been written if this had happened.

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UNCW Professor Explores UFOs

by Ben Steelman                 March 8, 2019                   (newbernsj.com)

• In her book, “American Cosmic”, professor Diana Pasulka, chair of the department of philosophy and religion at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, notes the similarities between people’s belief in extraterrestrial beings and starships, and people who believe in organized religion.

• For six years, Pasulka has focused on a small group of respectable academic scientists and researchers who believe that UFOs are real, ET beings have been in contact with us, and that the government knows much more than it’s telling. While many of these scientists remain anonymous, Pasulka was able to interview some including Jacques Vallee, the former NASA scientist and co-founder of ARPANET, an ancestor of the modern Internet.

• Several of the scientists Pasulka interviewed claim to have had non-verbal communication with alien beings. In some cases, the scientists believe the beings fed them inspirations or ideas for new innovations. For Pasulka, these descriptions sound a lot like traditional descriptions of divine inspiration or the Voice of God. She specifically notes the calling of Samuel in the Old Testament.

• ET believers’ often traffic in “artifacts” from UFO crashes which seem to possess uncanny powers. This reminds Pasulka of the medieval obsession with saints’ relics or with splinters from the True Cross.

• Descriptions of modern UFO encounters often involving loud humming, thunder, dancing lights and appearances of luminous beings — eerily similar to accounts of the miracles in Fatima, Portugal, in 1917.

• Pasulka notes a sharp disconnect between the believers who see the alien intelligences as mostly benign, and modern media which prefers scary stories like “Independence Day” or “Signs.”

• Again and again, she finds parallels between Catholic miracles and UFO beliefs. Ultimately, Pasulka sees both quests as a search for answers to unknowable mysteries and for guidance to who we are and where we are going.

[Editor’s Note]   Upon noting the similarities between ancient religions and modern UFO experiences, it isn’t such a great leap to speculate that these ancient religious accounts are actually descriptions of early human civilizations’ encounters with UFOs and extraterrestrial beings thousands of years ago, and they simply formed a religion around the experiences.

 

Depending on which poll you choose, between one-third and nearly half of Americans believe in unidentified flying objects, intelligent beings from other planets and those beings coming to visit (and, occasionally, probe) us.
The famed psychologist Carl Jung referred to UFOs as “a modern myth of things unseen.” For Jung, the question wasn’t so much whether UFOs exist or what they are as why we believe in them.

Diana Pasulka, a professor who chairs the department of philosophy and religion at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, takes much the same view in “American Cosmic.” For her, belief in starships and little green men proves remarkably similar to belief in organized (or disorganized) religion. At times, the two might be almost interchangeable.

            Diana Pasulka

Lots of “new” religions and cults place faith in UFOs, from Heaven’s Gate and Unarians to the Church of Scientologyand the Nation of Islam. A study of one such cult in the 1950s led psychologist Leon Festinger and colleagues to the theory of cognitive dissonance, how true believers adjust their worldviews when prophecy fails.

These, however, aren’t Pasulka’s real concern. For six years, she focused on a small tribe of academic scientists, published researchers with respectable records, who nevertheless believe UFOs are real, the government knows much more than it’s telling and non-human intelligences behind these craft have already contacted some of us.

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FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. ExoNews.org distributes this material for the purpose of news reporting, educational research, comment and criticism, constituting Fair Use under 17 U.S.C § 107. Please contact the Editor at ExoNews with any copyright issue.

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